Archive: pink-floyd

This month the seminal Warp Records label is celebrating its 20th anniversary. There is a heap of festivities planned, and I am expectantly waiting for the very awesome looking Warp20 box set to arrive in the next week or so.

They have a lot to celebrate. The label has personified the cutting-edge of electronic music for most of its existence. Few labels can claim to have been so seminal, and remain so strong for so long.

I discovered Warp at the beginning of this decade. I had already been developing a taste for experimental and electronic music, but before getting internet access I had no way to explore it. I had heard bits and bobs about Warp, but my first real exposure was when I saw the band Broadcast on one of those late-night music programmes on Channel 4. I remember very little about it, but I think the song that mesmerised me so much must have been ‘Illumination’. Here is a video of the band performing it live in 2005.

Once we got the internet, I was able to explore further. When I visited the Warp Records website, ‘Eros’ by Tortoise was playing on its front page. It was one of the most amazing and unique things I had ever heard.

The mixture of soaring sci-fi electronic sounds, intricate multi-layered drumming and funky guitar playing transformed my expectations of what music could achieve. Compared to the standardised indie-rock I had previously been listening to, hearing something as distinctive as this was an utter revelation.

I knew I had to continue on the path of discovery. Given that Tortoise shared the same label as Broadcast, there could be no starting point other than Warp. I was also quickly. attracted by Warp’s striking visual identity, which was largely shaped by The Designers Republic.

As I investigated the artists of Warp on the label’s website, I was surprised and delighted to discover a huge variety of new (to me) and exciting music. It is no surprise that today many of my favourite albums are ones released by Warp in 2001, when I was 14 and discovering all this amazing, diverse music.

But the Warp I discovered was already very different to the Warp that began in 1989. Back then, the promise of label founders Steve Beckett and Rob Mitchell was for the Sheffield-based Warp to be a “recognised, credible, uncompromising dance label”. Inevitably though, a label cannot survive 20 years without evolving.

Between 1992 and 1994 the label released the seminal series of albums including the eponymous compilation Artificial Intelligence. The idea behind the series was to showcase “electronic listening music” which designed more for home listening than the dancefloor, or more for your head than your body. This series contained music by musicians that were later to become huge: Richard D James (best known as Aphex Twin), Autechre, Black Dog Productions (containing the members of Plaid), Alex Paterson (from The Orb), Richie Hawtin among others.

The cover of Artificial Intelligence depicts a robot reclining in an armchair with copies of Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon and Kraftwerk’s Autobahn lying on the floor — an indication of Warp’s ambitions. The label became the most famous outlet of what is known as Intelligent Dance Music or IDM.

The IDM moniker makes everyone cringe. Few of the best IDM artists think of themselves as IDM, and the artists that describe themselves as IDM are usually not worth listening to. Musically, it might be fair to describe it as dance music’s equivalent of progressive rock. It was the necessary next step, but is denigrated by those who think it is too pretentious and impossible to enjoy.

Like prog rock, IDM had a limited shelf-life and it peaked around the turn of the decade. Electronic music as a whole is not the money-maker it once was. So Warp have further diversified. In the words of Steve Beckett, “probably the first sacrilegious move” was to sign Seefeel in the mid-1990s. They are a more conventional band with guitars and drums, associated with shoegaze as much as techno.

More non-techno artists followed, including the jazzy trip-hop act Red Snapper, 1960s-influenced Broadcast and, er, the downright odd Jimi Tenor (I never really got that one). There was also an increased focus on hip-hop with the likes of Prefuse 73 and the Antipop Consortium. Later, there was a distinctive move towards more conventional rock. This was most notable, controversial and successful with the chart-friendly indie-rock band Maxïmo Park.

Today Warp has artists as diverse as its history suggests. It probably remains best-known for electronic music leaders such as Aphex Twin, Autechre, Boards of Canada and Squarepusher. But on the same roster you can find electro-rock shape-shifters Battles, folk-rock bands like Grizzly Bear, the increasingly soul-oriented Jamie Liddell, hip-hopper Prefuse 73, indie band Maxïmo Park and even the satirist Chris Morris. Oh, and in addition to music they also now make films.

This diversity has been good and bad. Undoubtedly Warp lost its way a bit a few years ago as it struggled to find its feet after electronic music waned in popularity. But even after twenty years, Warp remains a path-finding label that anyone interested in experimental pop music should keep an eye on.

When I discovered Warp in 2001, the range of styles on offer was already massive. But each artist was notable for being interesting and innovative. It was easy to view the Warp label as a mark of quality, no matter what the genre was.

Long may it continue. There is absolutely no question that Warp Records transformed my outlook on music more than anything else. I am looking forward to the next 20 years of innovative music.

Over the next week or so I will write about 20 of the most interesting Warp albums from its 20 year history.

The Guardian has quite an interesting article about “classic” albums that do not warrant the hype (via DJ Martian). I wonder if that has one eye on the 10th anniversary of the release of OK Computer?

One interesting album on the list is Dark Side of the Moon, as nominated by Cornershop’s Tjinder Singh. I was just thinking recently about how Dark Side of the Moon is probably not Pink Floyd’s best album. Then someone brought it up in a conversation I had. Now this!

But the one that really made me happy was the inclusion of Is This It by The Strokes. Ian Williams of Battles wrote a paragraph about its mediocrity. Everything he says is spot-on.

I recently wrote about how I loathe indie music. I noted that the turning-point came when I was about 15 or 16 in 2001 — the year that Is This It was released. Never was an album title so apt.

There was so much hype surrounding The Strokes, it seemed impossible to believe that they would be anything but good. But when a friend made a CD-R of the album for me, I hated it so much that I returned it!

Is This It was so bad that it actually gave me a headache. It was so unbelievably conservative, derivative and certainly anything but “alternative”. The sheer monotony of the entire album made me depressed.

While I am often willing to give an album more than one chance on the basis that repeated listens can reveal hidden treats, I have refused to listen to Is This It a second time. It was obvious that this album had absolutely nothing to offer. And I didn’t want to risk getting a migraine.

As if to top it off, Is This It — if memory serves — lasts barely more than half an hour. This makes it an absolute fucking rip-off if you buy it at a normal album price. I expect an EP to be that long. Half an hour is roughly the length of a single that is released in the pretty much ubiquitous CD1 + CD2 format.

In short, Is This It lacked breath, depth and length. The personification of one-dimensional music. The prospect that The Strokes were the future of guitar-based music absolutely horrified me. So I turned my back on it all.

At the same time I discovered bands like Broadcast and Tortoise. I spent many evenings that year exploring the Warp Records website, avidly listening to the audio clips of their releases. A door had been opened to an amazing world where exciting and innovative music was being made.

Six years on, I am still listening to exciting and innovative music released on Warp — in the shape of Battles.

For an alternative view on The Guardian article, here is Richard Havers.

I know that Dark Side of the Rainbow is pretty old news, but I’ve just watched it for the first time on Google Video. I have to say, it is indeed scarily synchronised at certain points. The beginning of ‘Time’ gave me the creeps!

The official UK album chart is currently celebrating its 50th birthday.

Politicians have already chosen their favourite albums to have reached number 1. Now the public are being given their chance to vote (via Currybet).

The fact that you have to choose albums that have reached number 1 is surprisingly restrictive. For instance, you won’t be able to select ‘Dark Side of the Moon’. Meanwhile almost all of my favourite albums apart from Radiohead probably didn’t even reach the top 40, never mind the top spot.

I do own a lot of the albums though, particularly from the late 1990s, when I obviously still wasn’t quite savvy enough to be buying albums that weren’t popular. I am afraid my oldest selection is from the mid-1990s. I could have chosen some older ones, but I didn’t want to select just any old album. For instance, I could have chosen ‘The Last Broadcast’ by Doves because I do really like the album. But is it one of my favourites? Probably not. So I chose albums that I have listened to over and over again, and really mean something to me.

Here are my choices then:

  • Oasis — (What’s the Story) Morning Glory?
    I don’t actually own this album, but it is a bit difficult not to choose this album because I do quite like it. I realised it was great when I picked it up and realised that I knew every single one of the tracks, without ever having properly listened to it.
  • Pulp — Different Class
    Pulp was the first band I truly became obsessed with as a child. I recently rediscovered ‘Different Class’ — what a fine album it is. I have a whole blog post waiting to be posted about this though, so I’ll leave Pulp alone for the time being.
  • Radiohead — OK Computer
    One of the most overrated albums of all time, but it’s still quite good. It would probably be one of my favourites if it wasn’t for ‘Let Down’ and ‘Subterranean Homesick Alien’. Those tracks simply do not belong on an album lauded for being one of the greatest of all time.
  • Pulp — This is Hardcore
    It might not be quite as rounded as ‘Different Class’, certainly in terms of the appeal of Jarvis’ lyrics. The fun, poppy side was hidden away as the band became dark and creepy. Musically, bar a few turkeys, This is Hardcore is still very strong though. The title track is my favourite Pulp song.
  • Massive Attack — Mezzanine
    There are lots of very strong tracks on this album, particularly ‘Teardrop’ and ‘Group Four’. In my view this is Massive Attack’s best album by far.
  • Blur — 13
    This is an exceptional album from Blur at their very peak. Some might not have liked the band bringing their more experimental elements to the fore, but none of it is misplaced in my view. It is difficult to find a bad track in this album. Unfortunately it was to be Blur’s last vaguely good moment, as they could not be quite the same after Graham Coxon’s departure.
  • Radiohead — Kid A
    Still my favourite album of all time.
  • Radiohead — Amnesiac
    It hasn’t quite got the flow and polish of ‘Kid A’, but some of Radiohead’s best tracks are on here. ‘Pyramid Song’ is a pure stroke of genius, while none of Radiohead’s or Thom Yorke’s subsequent laptoppery has come close to topping ‘Pulk / Pull Revolving Doors’.
  • Gorillaz — Demon Days
    Well, maybe it is pushing it a bit to call this album a proper great. But this album was much better than Gorillaz already fine eponymous debut. And I am pleased that an album like this can become such a mainstream success.